1951_Copa_Rio

1951 Copa Rio

1951 Copa Rio

International football competition


The 1951 Copa Rio, also known as Torneio Internacional de Clubes Campeões (International Champions Club Tournament, in english) was the first edition of the Copa Rio, the first intercontinental club football tournament with teams from Europe and South America, held in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo from 30 June to 22 July. Participant clubs were divided into two zones of four teams, playing each other once in a single round-robin tournament.[1]

Quick Facts Tournament details, Host country ...

The tournament featured players such as Vavá, Ademir of Vasco da Gama, Jair da Rosa Pinto of Palmeiras, José Santamaría, Walter Taibo, goalkeeper Anibal Paz, Luis Volpi of Nacional, Branko Stankovic, Rajko Mitic of Red Star Belgrade, Giampiero Boniperti, Danish Karl Aage Præst and John Hansen of Juventus, José Travassos of Sporting Lisbon, and Swedish Lennart Samuelsson and Antoine Bonifaci of Nice. Juventus's coach was the legendary Hungarian György Sárosi.

The final was played in a two-legged format, contested by Brazilian team Palmeiras and Italian side Juventus. Palmeiras won the series 2–1 on points, achieving their first Copa Rio trophy.[1][2]

Participants

Notes
  1. Austrian champions of 1950–51 (Rapid Vienna) declined to participate.
  2. Italian champion of the season, AC Milan, renounced because they had to play the Latin Cup during the same period.

Venues

More information Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo ...

Tournament course

Rio de Janeiro Group

All matches played at Maracanã Stadium

More information Teams, GP ...
  • 30 June: Austria Wien 4−0 Nacional
  • 1 July: Vasco da Gama 5−1 Sporting CP
  • 3 July: Nacional 3−2 Sporting CP
  • 5 July: Vasco da Gama 5−1 Austria Wien
  • 7 July: Sporting CP 1−2 Austria Wien
  • 8 July: Vasco da Gama 2−1 Nacional

São Paulo Group

All matches played at Pacaembu Stadium.

More information Teams, GP ...
  • 30 June: Palmeiras 3−0 OGC Nice
  • 1 July: Juventus 3−2 Red Star
  • 3 July: OGC Nice 2−3 Juventus
  • 5 July: Palmeiras 2−1 Red Star
  • 7 July: Red Star 1−2 OGC Nice
  • 8 July: Palmeiras 0−4 Juventus

Semi-finals

São Paulo

  • 12 July: Austria Wien 3−3 Juventus
  • 14 July: Juventus 3−1 Austria Wien

Rio de Janeiro

  • 12 July: Vasco da Gama 1−2 Palmeiras
  • 15 July: Vasco da Gama 0−0 Palmeiras

Finals

More information Champion, Runner-up ...

Match details

More information Palmeiras, 1–0 ...
1951 Copa Rio Finals
1st Leg
Attendance: 56,961
Referee: Franz Grill (Austria)

More information Juventus, 2–2 ...
2nd Leg
Attendance: 100,093
Referee: Gabriel Tordjan (France)

Palmeiras won the series 2–1 on points

More information Copa Rio ...

References

  1. Copa Rio de Janeiro 1951 by Ricardo Pontes on the RSSSF
  2. Los antecedentes del Mundial de Clubes by Felipe Valderrama on El Cinco Cero, 16 Dec 2019

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